rpc_control

Synopsis

bool_trpc_control(intop, void *info);

Description

This RPC library routine allows applications to set and modify global RPC
attributes that apply to clients as well as servers. At present, it
supports only server side operations. This function allows applications to set and
modify global attributes that apply to client as well as server functions.
op indicates the type of operation, and info is a pointer to the
operation specific information. The supported values of op and their argument types,
and what they do are:

RPC_SVC_MTMODE_SET int * set multithread mode
RPC_SVC_MTMODE_GET int * get multithread mode
RPC_SVC_THRMAX_SET int * set maximum number of threads
RPC_SVC_THRMAX_GET int * get maximum number of threads
RPC_SVC_THRTOTAL_GET int * get number of active threads
RPC_SVC_THRCREATES_GET int * get number of threads created
RPC_SVC_THRERRORS_GET int * get number of thread create errors
RPC_SVC_USE_POLLFD int * set number of file descriptors to unlimited
RPC_SVC_CONNMAXREC_SET int * set non-blocking max rec size
RPC_SVC_CONNMAXREC_GET int * get non-blocking max rec size

Unless the application sets the Automatic or User MT modes, it will
stay in the default (single threaded) mode. See the Network Interfaces Programmer's Guide for the
meanings of these modes and programming examples. Once a mode is
set, it cannot be changed.

By default, the maximum number of threads that the server will create
at any time is 16. This allows the service developer to
put a bound on thread resources consumed by a server. If
a server needs to process more than 16 client requests concurrently, the maximum
number of threads must be set to the desired number. This
parameter may be set at any time by the server.

Set and get operations will succeed even in modes where the operations
don't apply. For example, you can set the maximum number of
threads in any mode, even though it makes sense only for the
Automatic MT mode. All of the get operations except RPC_SVC_MTMODE_GET apply only to
the Automatic MT mode, so values returned in other modes may be
undefined.

By default, RPC servers are limited to a maximum of 1024 file
descriptors or connections due to limitations in the historical interfaces svc_fdset(3NSL)
and svc_getreqset(3NSL). Applications written to use the preferred interfaces of svc_pollfd(3NSL) and
svc_getreq_poll(3NSL) can use an unlimited number of file descriptors. Setting info to
point to a non-zero integer and op to RPC_SVC_USE_POLLFD removes the
limitation.

Connection oriented RPC transports read RPC requests in blocking mode by default.
Thus, they may be adversely affected by network delays and broken clients.
RPC_SVC_CONNMAXREC_SET enables non-blocking mode and establishes the maximum record size (in bytes)
for RPC requests; RPC responses are not affected. Buffer space is allocated as
needed up to the specified maximum, starting at the maximum or RPC_MAXDATASIZE,
whichever is smaller.

The value established by RPC_SVC_CONNMAXREC_SET is used when a connection is created,
and it remains in effect for that connection until it is closed.
To change the value for existing connections on a per-connection basis, see svc_control(3NSL).

RPC_SVC_CONNMAXREC_GET retrieves the current maximum record size. A zero value means that
no maximum is in effect, and that the connections are in blocking
mode.

info is a pointer to an argument of type int. Non-connection RPC
transports ignore RPC_SVC_CONNMAXREC_SET and RPC_SVC_CONNMAXREC_GET.

Return Values

This routine returns TRUE if the operation was successful and returnsFALSE otherwise.